July 3, 2008
bye bye sonics
©ROD MAR / THE SEATTLE TIMES
so it’s official. bye bye seattle sonics….it’s time to cheer on the oklahoma city sonics. that is…if you even know where oklahoma is…..
the backlash on facebook was quite predictable starting once it broke at 4pm.
“the nba sucks.”
“wondering if we get to at least keep the Sonic Dancers…
“
“believes that the cowardly mayor and city council sold out the people of Seattle by giving away the Sonics for 30 pieces of silver.”
“Goodbye Sonics! I will miss you….. =(.”
“crying tears of green and gold :*(.”
“the NBA is dead to me, starbucks is dead to me.”
“bye sonics… : (.”
“remembering this dunk: http://youtube.com/watch?v=xL8vUUABdgA.”
“saving up his change to buy back the sonics.”
“NEVER WATCHING NBA AGAIN UNTIL SEATTLE GETS A NEW TEAM!!!!! STUPID SEATTLE OFFICIALS SOLD THE FANS OUT!! AND NO I WILL NOT BE A BLAZERS FAN!!!”
“will miss the Sonics.
.”
“F*CK CLAY BENNETT AND DAVID STERN!!!”
“hate the nba.”
“says goodbye to the Sonics, and will miss the 20 win seasons.”
“all you seattlelites can start rooting for the lakers now!
“
“ready to riot. Can the people of Seattle sue Greg Nickels for being a sell out?”
“can’t believe the seattle officials sold out.”
“goodbye sonics…..”
“eff clay bennet, david stern, and the nba.”
“F*ck the NBA!!!!”
“can’t believe that the Sonics are really going to Oklahoma City… I guess I’m driving to Portland for hoops now…”
“thinks his city’s government sold out. Frickin Clay Bennett.”
“has a settlement. we keep the sonics and clay bennett can go f*ck himself. does that work for everyone?”
And some news stories:
Sonics saga sends out a bad message
SuperSonics, Seattle reach last-minute settlement
Sonics are Oklahoma City-bound
Sonics moving to Oklahoma City
Stupid Oklahoma Papers.
Now that Seattle lawsuit has been settled, the NBA is on its way here to stay
Pop the corks and celebrate!

June 5, 2008
Beat LA
Just cuz I forgot to do it before Game 1. But in any event, to show who I’m rooting for…..
Enjoy the Greeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeen!

May 27, 2008
Bennett to Sonics players: ‘Boo hoo’
Good ‘ol Clay Bennett. Can’t seem to take his foot out of his mouth. Here’s another great story about an amazing email he wrote:
Bennett to Sonics players: ‘Boo hoo’
E-mails reveal his reaction to news that some were upset about leaving Seattle
Among the hundreds of thousands of words transcribed on 470 pages of depositions taken by lawyers for the upcoming trial between the city of Seattle and the Sonics’ ownership group over the team’s KeyArena lease, there are two Clay Bennett would surely love to take back.
Boo hoo.
In an e-mail to Oklahoma-based public relations consultant Brent Gooden after hearing some of the Sonics players were upset about the prospect of moving the franchise to Oklahoma City, Bennett responded by writing, “Boo hoo,” according to a line of questioning by city of Seattle attorney Jeff Johnson.
To which Gooden replied, “Great response. I would play wherever for half of the lowest paid player on the team.”
While Bennett’s own deposition is almost entirely redacted in the documents released last week via a public-records request, this particular e-mail exchange was contained in Gooden’s deposition.
Under questioning from Johnson, Gooden said he remembered that correspondence with Bennett and then tried to explain his own response.
“I believe that there had been some politicians who had criticized the salaries of some of the NBA players within that context and there was, you know, some, you know, exchange on that matter,” Gooden said.
While that particular testimony should have little affect on Bennett’s court case with the city, it doesn’t figure to prove popular with players dealing with the franchise’s uncertain future.
More damaging in terms of the trial figure to be other previously undisclosed e-mails indicating Bennett’s ownership group’s desire to move the team out of Seattle well in advance of his initial Oct. 31, 2007, deadline to get a new arena deal worked out in the Seattle area.
Another e-mail from Gooden to Bennett, written in May 2007 when the Save Our Sonics fan group was trying to put together a referendum making it impossible for the city to negotiate with the Sonics for an early buyout of the KeyArena lease, said, “(NBA commissioner David) Stern should take note and help us get out of Dodge ASAP.”
Then there’s an e-mail from minority partner Aubrey McClendon to Bennett after McClendon was quoted in the Oklahoma Journal Record as saying the group never intended to keep the team in Seattle.
“Oh no. Just read this,” McClendon wrote. “Have I caused a problem for you. I am so sorry. The truth is we did buy it with the hope of moving to Oklahoma City.”
Gooden, hired by Bennett to head his public-relations efforts, admitted he was disappointed that McClendon got “off message” in his remarks to the newspaper after Gooden had provided numerous directives concerning how the owners should respond to questions regarding the team’s future.
“Sort of ironic that you had been so worried about a Seattle newspaper guy getting in and hassling the owners and trying to muck up some story and it turned out to be the local guy that did it?” Johnson asked.
“Maybe you’re right,” said Gooden.
The city’s attorneys continually pounded away in the pretrial interviews about how Bennett never indicated how much money his group would contribute to a proposed $500 million Renton arena, thus making it difficult for Seattle politicians and residents to get behind the plan.
After a Seattle P-I reporter sought comment from Bennett over how much money his Professional Basketball Club would commit to the project, Bennett e-mailed Gooden, “Please stay WAY AWAY from talking about our investment in the building.”
Jim Kneeland, a longtime Seattle public relations consultant, apparently told Bennett he needed to make some such commitment and also should leave the door ajar for a potential KeyArena solution, but neither idea took hold and Kneeland eventually was fired.
McClendon testified in his deposition that he never recalled Bennett raising the question among the ownership group over how much money they should contribute to a Seattle arena solution.
Oklahoma City manager Jim Couch said Bennett talked to him in the spring of 2007 about holding dates open at Ford Center, Oklahoma City’s basketball arena, for the upcoming season in case the Sonics could move quickly.
Johnson, the city’s attorney, also questioned Gooden about whether he’d heard that Bennett tried to get the NBA to consider a special relocation process to avoid playing the 2007-08 season at KeyArena, but the league said it couldn’t meet such requirements by its June 1 deadline.
“I may have heard something, but I don’t recall anything specific,” Gooden said.
Such conjecture over an early departure wasn’t limited to the Oklahoma group. Sonics vice president Terry McLaughlin met with Seattle Deputy Mayor Tim Ceis in May 2007 to discuss a potential buyout of what at the time was the remaining three years of the KeyArena lease.
The two sides view that meeting in different terms, however. Ceis said he listened to McLaughlin, told him he would talk to Seattle Mayor Greg Nickels about the idea and ultimately was told no deal by Nickels. Ceis said he didn’t think a buyout was a good idea and “I don’t believe I conveyed optimism to Mr. McLaughlin.”
Sonics CEO Danny Barth, however, testified in his deposition that the Sonics heard the city originally was interested in a negotiated settlement.
“Based on what Terry told me, the initial meeting went very well and Mr. Ceis was favorable to look at the settlement for the lease, that they were planning on having another meeting, and the question came up about whether or not they needed lawyers there to start looking at potential drafting or something along those lines,” Barth said. “But at the same time, Mr. Ceis wanted to go back, I believe, and check with the mayor.”
Barth also said it was his understanding that a later $26 million buyout proposal from Bennett to the city came at the request of Seattle City Attorney Tom Carr, who ultimately rejected that offer.
Nickels has since remained firmly entrenched in his belief that the Sonics should play their final two years at KeyArena and will pursue that outcome with the city’s trial against Bennett’s group starting June 16 in U.S. District Court, unless the two sides come to some sort of settlement in the next 19 days.
April 24, 2008
Newly revealed e-mails could cause headaches for Sonics owner
Newly revealed e-mails could cause headaches for Sonics owner
SEATTLE — More e-mails involving SuperSonics owner Clay Bennett have been revealed that could slow or even stop the team’s move from Seattle to Oklahoma City, a move the NBA overwhelmingly approved last week.
A filing by the city of Seattle this week in federal court in New York includes e-mails to and from Bennett that show the NBA was concerned last summer that Sonics owners may be breaching their contractual promise of good-faith efforts to find a new arena in Seattle.
I don’t mind the PR ugliness [pretty used to it], but I am concerned from a legal standpoint that your statement could perhaps undermine our basic premise of ‘good faith best efforts.’ 
– Sonics owner Clay Bennett, in an e-mail to co-owner Aubrey McClendon
In court documents provided Thursday by attorneys representing the city, Bennett stated in an e-mail to Sonics co-owner Aubrey McClendon last Aug. 13 that the NBA was looking into issues “relative to certain documents that we signed at closing that may have been breached.”
Bennett wrote that president of league and basketball operations Joel Litvin was looking into the possible breach.
Earlier that day, Bennett had written an e-mail to McClendon referring to the fallout from McClendon’s comments to an Oklahoma business publication that “we didn’t buy the team to keep it in Seattle, we hoped to come here.”
“Yes sir we get killed on this one,” Bennett wrote to McClendon. “I don’t mind the PR ugliness [pretty used to it], but I am concerned from a legal standpoint that your statement could perhaps undermine our basic premise of ‘good faith best efforts.’”
NBA commissioner David Stern fined McClendon $250,000 for his comment. The city is citing it as evidence Sonics owners lied to Seattle when asserting they weren’t trying to move the team.
The e-mails are part of the city’s recent filings in the U.S. District Court for the Southern District of New York, where Seattle is attempting to compel the NBA to provide financial records for all of its teams. The city is also trying to force Stern to testify as part of Seattle’s dispute with the Professional Basketball Club, the Sonics’ ownership entity, over the KeyArena lease.
A week before NBA owners voted 28-2 to approve the team’s move to Oklahoma, the city released e-mails that appeared to show Bennett and his Sonics co-owners were eagerly anticipating moving the team from Seattle to Oklahoma City almost as soon as they bought the team in July 2006 for $300 million from a Seattle-area group led by Starbucks chairman Howard Schultz.
In one from April 2007, Bennett stated, “I am a man possessed! Will do everything we can,” in response to co-owner Tom Ward asking if they were in for another “lame duck season” in Seattle.
Last week, immediately after the NBA approved the move, Bennett said he was referring to how possessed he was to find a home for the team in Seattle.
After the e-mails became public, Schultz filed suit against Bennett for allegedly violating the good-faith agreement.
The Sonics provided the e-mails to comply with a ruling by federal judge Marsha Pechman in Seattle. She ruled such messages between the co-owners were pertinent for the discovery phase of the June trial between the city and the Sonics over the KeyArena lease.
Bennett argues he is contractually allowed to write a check to buy out the lease and thus move his team to Oklahoma City for next season.
The city asserts the lease requires the team to play in KeyArena through the 2009-10 season. Seattle wants to keep the Sonics in town for those two years to buy time for a group led by Microsoft CEO Steve Ballmer or some other local buyer to find an arena solution and keep the team in the region for the long term.
The trial is scheduled to begin June 16 in federal court in Seattle.
In a motion Bennett filed last week in Seattle, the owner claimed the trial “has nothing to do with the last two years of the lease. Instead, the city is trying to exploit its landlord status to force the PBC to sell the team … to drive up costs for the PBC … to try to force PBC to sell.”
The city has already rejected Bennett’s offer of $26 million to settle. Last week, Seattle Mayor Greg Nickels repeatedly refused to answer if there was a price at which the city would consider settling with Bennett. The mayor instead reiterated the city intends for the Sonics to remain in Seattle for the long term.
Last April, Bennett told a meeting of the Seattle Convention and Visitors Board that Las Vegas was a possible relocation alternative. In an e-mail to Stern dated April 28, 2007, Bennett regretted “my clumsy volley” but wrote that the “threat of Las Vegas has moved the needle” on what he saw as Seattle’s indifference toward the Sonics’ situation.
“Leadership in the market has never valued the threat of moving to Oklahoma City,” Bennett wrote to Stern. “They don’t even know where it is.”
April 8, 2008
Mark Cuban, a Sonics Supporter
http://seattlepi.nwsource.com/basketball/358272_cuban09.html
Cuban opposes Sonics move
Owner to vote against bid
DALLAS — Dallas Mavericks owner Mark Cuban refuses to write Seattle off as an NBA city, even if city and state leaders aren’t giving him any reason for his faithfulness.
Cuban, churning out miles on his Stairmaster, said Tuesday that he would vote against a Sonics’ relocation to Oklahoma City, even if it means he is the lone owner to support the Sonics remaining in Seattle.
Cuban said he believes market size is critical.
Seattle is the 14th-largest media market while Oklahoma City is 45th.
“I’m going to wait to get all the information,” he said before the Sonics’ game against the Mavericks. “(But) my preference is the Sonics stay in Seattle. My prejudice is against having a Dustbowl Division in this part of the country because I don’t think in the big picture that helps the NBA and I think the bigger market helps the NBA.”
If the Sonics were to relocate to Oklahoma City, the NBA could move the OKC team to the Southwest Division along with the Mavericks, Spurs, Rockets, Hornets and Grizzlies. Cuban has not wavered in his support for Seattle, despite being informed that the Steve Ballmer-led investment group has pulled back its offer to help renovate KeyArena.
“There could be information that sways me,” he said. “If they come back and said the Oklahoma City index is 200 when it comes to watching the NBA on TNT or ABC, and no one in Seattle watches, then OK maybe there’s information that goes beyond market size.
“My prejudice is to vote them in but like everything else in the NBA, (the vote) will be 29-1.”
Cuban said he would welcome Ballmer into the NBA ownership family and admires the Microsoft CEO’s affection for the sport.
“I’d like to see Steve Ballmer in the NBA. It would be phenomenal,” Cuban said. “I know Steve would get up early in the morning and play basketball. That tells you something. Is it a business or is it in your blood and you just love the game? That’s one of the things I liked about Howard Schultz. I think he was sold a bill of goods from the NBA more than anything else.”
Many Sonics fans believe Schultz triggered the team’s potential relocation when he stunningly sold the Sonics to Clay Bennett’s Oklahoma City-based ownership group in July 2006. Cuban doesn’t view Schultz as a villain.
“There’s a lot of things that aren’t obvious until you look from the inside out about the NBA and our economics,” Cuban said. “That’s just the way it works. There’s a reason why we’re 0-for-since-I’ve-been-here in terms of our moves and expansions. You can always win the next game.”
NBA commissioner David Stern said league owners have been “lukewarm” to the idea of expansion and Cuban said he would totally oppose any idea of expansion. He voted against the NBA’s expansion to Charlotte in 2001.
“I would always vote against expansion because expansion’s the worst economic move a league like the NBA can make,” he said.

